They stopped at her apartment first. Ollie was still awake, sitting on the couch watching late-night television. His eyes went wide when Alex walked in behind Elena.
"Ollie, this is Alex. Alex, my brother Oliver."
"Just Ollie," her brother said, standing to shake Alex's hand. Elena could see him taking in the expensive suit, the confident bearing, trying to reconcile this man with his sister's usual type.
"Good to meet you, Ollie. Elena talks about you constantly."
"All good things, I hope."
"Exclusively." Alex's smile was genuine, easy. "She mentioned you're an artist. I'd love to see your work sometime."
Ollie's eyes lit up-the way they always did when someone expressed genuine interest in his art. "Really? I mean, it's not that good, but-"
"I'm sure it's excellent." Alex glanced at Elena. "Take your time. I'll wait in the car."
"You don't have to-"
"I want to. This is your time with your brother."
After Alex left, Ollie turned to Elena with wide eyes. "Holy shit."
"Language."
"Holy shit," he repeated, because teenage brothers were contractually obligated to be difficult. "That's your guy? That's the date?"
"Yes."
"He's... wow. He's really into you."
"What makes you say that?"
"The way he looks at you. Like you're the only person in the room." Ollie grinned. "Also, he wants to see my art. Nobody offers to see a teenager's art unless they're serious about the teenager's sister."
"It's only been two dates."
"Yeah, but they're good dates. Important dates." He hugged her suddenly, fiercely. "Be careful, but also be happy. You deserve happy, Ellie."
"When did you get so wise?"
"I have a lot of time to think, lying around being sick." He released her, his expression turning serious. "Go. Have fun. Don't worry about me."
"I always worry about you."
"I know. But tonight, worry a little less. Okay?"
She kissed his forehead, grabbed an overnight bag with toiletries and fresh clothes for work tomorrow-just in case-and headed back downstairs.
Alex was waiting by the car, scrolling through his phone. He looked up when she approached, his expression softening.
"Everything okay?"
"Everything's fine. Ollie likes you."
"Good. I like him too. He has your eyes."
Such a simple observation, but it made her chest tight with emotion.
The drive to Alex's penthouse was quiet, comfortable. He held her hand the entire way, his thumb tracing circles on her palm.
The building was in the financial district, all glass and steel and modern elegance. The elevator required a key card to access the top floor-of course it did. Everything in Alex's world required special access.
The penthouse itself stole her breath.
Floor-to-ceiling windows offered a panoramic view of the city, lights stretching out like fallen stars. The space was minimalist but warm, expensive but lived-in. Dark leather furniture, rich wood accents, art on the walls that was probably original and priceless.
"This is..." She trailed off, unable to find words.
"Too much?"
"Beautiful. And yes, too much." She turned to face him. "Alex, I need to say something."
His expression shuttered slightly, like he was bracing for rejection. "Okay."
"This-us-it's complicated. Our lives are so different. You have all this, and I have a tiny apartment and medical debt and a brother who's dying. We don't make sense."
"No," he agreed. "We don't."
"But I like you. More than I should after two dates. And that scares me."
"It scares me too." He crossed to her, taking both her hands in his. "I have my own complications, Elena. Obligations and expectations I can't explain yet. Things that make this-" he gestured between them, "-nearly impossible."
"Then why are we doing this?"
"Because impossible isn't the same as wrong." He cupped her face, his gray eyes intense. "I know this doesn't make sense. I know we come from different worlds. But when I'm with you, I feel like myself for the first time in years. And I'm not ready to give that up."
"Even if it's temporary?"
"Even then."
She should walk away. Should protect her heart before it was too late.
But looking into his eyes, feeling the warmth of his hands on her face, she realized it was already too late.
"Show me the view," she said instead of all the sensible things she could have said.
His smile was relief and joy and promise all at once. "Come on."
He led her to the windows, wrapped his arms around her from behind, and they stood there watching the city breathe below them.
"Tell me about your brother," he said quietly. "About what happened."
So she did. Standing in his arms, watching the world turn below them, she told him everything. About the accident, the guilt, the fear. About Ollie's diagnosis and the desperate scramble for money and treatment. About the art dreams she'd abandoned and the life she'd built from the ashes.
He listened without interrupting, his arms tightening around her when her voice broke, his presence solid and comforting.
When she finished, he turned her in his arms. "You're the strongest person I've ever met."
"I'm not strong. I'm just surviving."
"That's what strength is. Surviving when giving up would be easier." He kissed her forehead, her temple, the corner of her mouth. "Let me help. With Ollie's treatment, with-"
"No." She pulled back enough to meet his eyes. "I can't accept that, Alex. I won't be someone you fix or save or take on as a project."
"That's not what I'm offering."
"Then what are you offering?"
He was quiet for a long moment, his expression conflicted. Then: "I don't know yet. But I want to figure it out. With you."
It wasn't a promise. It wasn't even really an answer. But it was honest, and honesty was more than she expected.
"Okay," she said. "We'll figure it out."
"Together?"
"Together."
He kissed her then, soft and slow and deep. She melted into him, let herself forget about complications and impossibilities and all the reasons this would never work.
For tonight, they could just be Alex and Elena. Two people finding something real in a city full of illusions.
Tomorrow would bring reality soon enough.
They spent the rest of the night talking, curled up on his couch with the city spread out before them. He told her about his brother, about the weight of family expectations, about the loneliness of always being seen as a name instead of a person.
She told him about her parents, about the art she still dreamed of creating, about the fear that lived in her chest every time Ollie went for treatment.
As dawn started to paint the sky pink and gold, Elena found herself drowsy and content, her head on Alex's shoulder, his arms around her.
"I should get home," she murmured, even though she didn't want to move.
"Stay," he said against her hair. "Just a little longer."
So she did, drifting off in his arms as the city woke up around them.
For the first time in three years, Elena Morrison let herself hope.
It was terrifying and beautiful and completely insane.
But it felt like the beginning of something that might just change everything.





